Delicatessen (film)
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Delicatessen | |
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Original theatrical poster |
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Directed by | Marc Caro Jean-Pierre Jeunet |
Produced by | Claudie Ossard |
Written by | Gilles Adrien Marc Caro Jean-Pierre Jeunet |
Starring | Pascal Benezech Dominique Pinon Marie-Laure Dougnac Jean-Claude Dreyfus Karin Viard |
Music by | Carlos D'Alessio |
Cinematography | Darius Khondji |
Distributed by | Miramax Films |
Release date(s) | April 17, 1991 (France) |
Country | France |
All Movie Guide profile | |
IMDb profile |
Delicatessen (1991) is a French black comedy by Jean-Pierre Jeunet and Marc Caro, starring Dominique Pinon.
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[edit] Plot
Delicatessen is set in an unspecified time and place which has the appearance of a post-apocalyptic version of 1950s France. The story revolves around a bizarre group of neighbours living in an apartment building situated over a butcher shop, the operator of which is also their landlord. Each of them pays a fee to the butcher for both rent and food, which is in short supply. Grain is used as currency (corn and legumes(vegetables in French)) and animals are in short supply, having been hunted nearly to extinction for food. The butcher hires a "worker" in exchange for room and board, and later this worker is cannibalized. The hero is an unemployed clown, who is the latest part-time worker to move in. He begins an affair with the butcher's daughter while trying to survive constant attempts on his life. He is ultimately rescued by an underground vegetarian terrorist organization who call themselves Les Troglodistes (The Troglodists).
[edit] Background
There are similarities between the butcher's crimes and the real crimes of Fritz Haarmann on post-World War I era: 'Rumours had it that Haarmann would then peddle meat from the bodies of his victims as black market pork'. More information on the bottom on a theme related article: Germany's internet cannibal
[edit] Cast
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[edit] Trivia
The action is set in a French city after a nuclear war or some equivalent global catastrophe. It is implied that crops cannot be grown and that most animals have been hunted for food.
The original American trailer for the film was the entire uncut "squeeky spring" sequence from the film - a montage of the butcher/landlord making love to his mistress on a noisy bed, and the rest of the building's tenants performing activities (painting ceilings, knitting, assembling novelty toys) at an increasing pace, with the squeaks from the bedsprings dictating the tempo. The trailer ends with the butcher climaxing, each tenant's activity ending (rather violently) and then a slam cut to the title logo and the 'swinging pig' emblem.
[edit] External links
Feature films of Jean-Pierre Jeunet |
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Delicatessen (with Marc Caro, 1991) • The City of Lost Children (with Marc Caro, 1995) • Alien: Resurrection (1997) • Amélie (2001) • A Very Long Engagement (2004) |